CONNECTICUT ARTS CONNECTION --
An award-winning site for news and reviews of Connecticut's professional theater and arts.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Theater Review: A Christmas Carol -- Hartford Stage

In Hartford Stage's A Christmas Carol, The Emphasis is on the GhostsBy Lauren Yarger Right from the start, Michael Wilson’s adaptation of Charles Dicken’s A Christmas Carol makes it clear that its subtitle, “A Ghost of a Christmas Story,” should be taken seriously. Not only do the four ghosts we expect pay visits, but others dance, fly, float and slither across the stage in a satisfying presentation now in its 15th season at Hartford Stage.

Bill Raymond, who currently can be seen in movie theaters as the Speaker of the house in Steven Spielberg's “Lincoln,” returns for his 13th season as Ebenezer Scrooge (Gustave Johnson plays the role for student matinee performances.) His Scrooge is a little more upbeat and likable than most and Wilson adds touches of humor that keep the tale of the cold-hearted miser who long ago forgot the spirit of Christmas from being too somber.

Director Maxwell Williams helms the tale of how the spirits of Christmas Past, Present and Future help Scrooge change his heart.

Scrooge, in his usual foul mood, grumbles about having to give his clerk a day off, scoffs at making donations to charities to help the poor and demand payment of debts from the marketplace vendors who owe him money.

But Scrooge is in for a Christmas Eve he’ll never forget. When he arrives home that night, dead business partner Jacob Marley (Noble Shropshire) rises up through the floorboards of his bed chamber, fettered and moaning in torment. He begs Scrooge to change his ways and to avoid making the same mistake he did by putting a love of wealth before love of his fellow man. He warns of more ghostly visits to come.

The Spirit of Christmas Past (Johanna Morrison) arrives on a beautiful sleigh with fresh fallen snow and transports Scrooge back in time. He remembers the love of his little sister, Fan (Abi Connor and Abigail McMillan), the joy of working for generous boss, Mr. Fezziwig (Alan Rust) and his engagement to beautiful Belle (Gillian Williams), whom he once loved more than money.

Lessons are learned from the present as well, as a Santa type spirit (Rust) arrives amidst the glitter of the season and shows Scrooge how his poor clerk, Bob Cratchit (Robert Hannon Davis), keeps good cheer despite laboring away for almost no wages while his son, Tiny Tim (Ethan Pancoast and Fred Thornley IV), a cripple, amazingly leads his family in a toast to the old miser’s health. Nearby, Scrooge’s nephew, Fred (Curtis Billings) and his family and friends enjoy festive holiday games while pitying Scrooge, who every year declines their invitation to join the fun.

The Future looks grim. Scrooge’s housekeeper, Mrs. Dilbert (Stropshire, playing the female role for no apparent reason), sells the penny pincher’s bedclothes for a profit before the undertaker comes to collect Scrooge’s corpse and no one seems to care enough about him to come to a funeral. Even worse, if the shadows of things to come aren’t changed, Tiny Tim could die.

Don’t worry. There’s a happy ending and this production is a fun holiday tradition for many families in the Hartford area.

Lots of little ones were giggling merrily at the matinee I attended (the theater suggests the show is best for youngsters 9 and up. I agree. Some younger ones were talking and asking questions all the way through) and many local children are cast in various roles under the direction of Youth Director Christina Pellegrini. They include Tiana N. Bailey, Tailanae Brantley, Lauren Cassot, Abi Conner, Meg Conner, Jacrhys Dalton, Rachael Dalton, Tyra Harris, Andrew Holland, Daniel Kemple, Daniel Madigan, Marisa McKee, Emily McLean, Abigail McMillian, Adian McMillan, Dermot McMillan, Eric Stephen Murphy, Benjamin Olsen, Eliza Polukhin, Ankit Roy, Aleksei Sandals, Brandon Szep, John Henry Wenz, and Tilden Wilder.

The show runs through Dec. 29. Run time is an hour and 45 minutes including an intermission. Performance schedule varies: Tickets $28.59-$83.50; $28.50-$68.50 for students: (860) 527-5151; www.hartfordstage.org.

Special events:

-- Local vendors will showcase unique gift items in the lobby before the show, during intermission and after the show on Dec. 9. Free to the public. Doors open at 12:30 p.m.

-- Behind the Magic: The Hartford Stage production staff hosts a behind-the-scenes look at the special effects that make ghosts soar and snow fall. This takes place Dec. 16 at 4 pm. Cost $5 per person.

-- Family Fun Night: The ghosts will greet and entertain. After the show, get autographs from all your favorite characters. Free with show ticket. Dec. 20 at 6:45 pm.

-- Christmas Carol Experience package. Enjoy unlimited hot cocoa, fill up a bag at the Candy Bar before the show, and decorate a cookie at intermission. Dec. 8, 9, 15, 16, 22, and 23, before the show at 1:30 pm. Cost: $10 per person. (Tickets to show sold separately.

Subscribe

My Bio

Lauren Yarger is a theater reviewer in New York and Connecticut. She is former Second Vice President of the Drama Desk and a voting member of the Drama Desk and of The Outer Critics Circle, for which she serves as Event Manager for the annual awards dinner.

She is a member of the American Theatre Critics Association, the Connecticut Critics Circle and is a member of the League of Professional Theatre Women, serving as Founder of its Connecticut Chapter.

A playwright, Yarger has written, directed and produced numerous shows and special events for both secular and Christian audiences. She co-wrote a Christian musical version of A Christmas Carol which played to sold-out audiences of over 3,000 in Vermont and was awarded the 2000 Vermont Bessie (theater and film awards) for “People’s Choice for Theatre.”

Yarger trained for three years in the BroadwayLeague’s Producer Development Program, completed the Commercial Theater Institute's Producing Three-Day Training and produced a one-woman musical about Mary Magdalene that toured nationally and closed with an off-Broadwayrun.

She was a Fellow at the National Critics Institute at the O'NeillTheater Center in Waterford, CT.

Formerly she was a theater reviewer for the CT Manchester Journal-Inquirer and was Connecticut theater editor

for CurtainUp.com . She was a Connecticut and New York reviewer for American Theater Web. Yarger is a book reviewer and writer for Publishers Weekly and freelances for other sites. She is a member of the National Book Critics Circle.

She served as a judge for the SDX Awards presentedby the Society of Professional Journalists. She also served as a member of the Connecticut Critics Circle awards committee.

A former newspaper editor and graduate of the University of Missouri’s School of Journalism, Yarger also worked in arts management for the Bushnell Center for the Performing Arts,the Hartford Symphony Orchestra and served for nine years as the Executive Director of Masterwork Productions, Inc. She lives with her husband in West Granby, CT. They have two adult children.